How Marietta custom home builders charge more and win better clients.
Two West Cobb custom builders. Same crews, same subs, same lumber. One builds $1.1M homes. The other builds $1.7M homes. Here’s where the $600,000 gap actually lives — and how to close it.
Your work is already $1.7M. Your sales process isn’t.
Here’s the thing. We talk to a lot of custom builders in Marietta who genuinely build a better house than the guy across town pulling permits for $1.7M projects in Lost Mountain or Walton Estates. Better trim carpenters. Better tile crews. Better project managers. And yet they’re stuck at a $1.1M ceiling.
Real talk: the actual build isn’t where premium clients decide who to hire. They decide weeks before the first site visit — sitting on a couch in East Cobb scrolling through builder websites, judging Instagram feeds, comparing one consultation experience against another.
By the time a $1.7M West Cobb couple agrees to meet you in person, you’ve already either passed or failed the sorting filter. 14 builder websites visited. Maybe 5 consultations booked. Maybe 2 final proposals reviewed. Most of that judging happens in a screen, in pajamas, without you in the room.
The builders winning $1.7M West Cobb projects aren’t necessarily the best craftsmen — they’re the ones whose pre-contract experience matches what a $1.7M client expects. Build quality only gets evaluated after you’ve already won the contract.
The good news? Pre-contract positioning is something you can rebuild on purpose. It’s not personality. It’s not pedigree. It’s a system of trust signals you can install in 90 days.
$1.1M positioning vs. $1.7M positioning
Same crew. Same subs. Same square footage. Completely different math.
| Touchpoint | $1.1M builder | $1.7M builder (what we install) |
|---|---|---|
| Website portfolio | Phone photos in a Squarespace grid | Architectural photography with build-story narrative |
| First consultation | Tape measure and a notepad | Curated material samples + 3D rendering preview |
| Proposal format | Three-page Word doc with line items | 32-page bound book with renderings and timeline |
| Pricing language | “Cost per square foot” | “Tier of finish and experience” |
| Reference handoff | “Call these three past clients” | Curated client tour at a completed estate |
A finished West Cobb custom home — the kind of project that justifies $1.7M pricing only if it’s photographed and presented as one.
Stop selling square footage. Start selling the experience of building with you.
You’ve probably noticed: every builder in Marietta talks about the same things. Quality craftsmanship. On-time delivery. Hands-on owner. These phrases are so common in West Cobb that they don’t actually mean anything to a buyer comparing 14 websites.
The builders charging $1.7M aren’t claiming to do better work — they’re describing a different kind of experience. The design phase. The selections process. The weekly client meetings. The way the final walkthrough is staged. They sell the months around the build, not just the build itself.
The $1.7M West Cobb client isn’t buying a 6,200-square-foot house. They’re buying 14 months of feeling like the most important client at the company.— What 30+ luxury custom build sales calls have taught us
That reframe changes everything you build into your custom home builder web design. The portfolio page stops being a thumbnail grid. The about page stops being a bio. The consultation process becomes the product. And the price tag finally matches the work.
The three pre-contract changes that unlock $600K more per project.
Every West Cobb builder we’ve helped reposition does the same three things. None of them require hiring better crews. All of them require investing in what happens before the contract.
What separates a $1.1M builder from a $1.7M builder.
These three shifts are the entire reason one builder in Lost Mountain closes 60% of consultations at $1.7M while a builder doing the same quality of work fights for $1.1M jobs in the same zip code.
A website that signals $1.7M before the buyer reads a word.
A $1.7M client clicks your homepage and gives it 2.4 seconds before deciding whether you’re a serious option. Your hero photo, your typography, your portfolio thumbnails — all judged before the brain has read a sentence. We rebuild the site as an architectural piece in itself, with full-bleed project photography, a clean editorial layout, and a portfolio that reads like a coffee-table book. This is the single highest-leverage move in the entire premium positioning playbook.
3D renderings before the contract.
A West Cobb buyer signing $1.7M is buying a story they can see. A 3D rendering package delivered at the second meeting — even rough massing — converts hesitant prospects into committed buyers.
A 14-month build calendar, presented up front.
$1.7M buyers want to see the entire process mapped — design, permitting, selections, construction milestones, final walkthrough. The calendar itself becomes a selling document. It makes the price feel inevitable.
The compounding effect.
Each shift on its own moves the needle 8–12% on close rate. Stacked together, they triple it. A West Cobb builder we worked with last year went from a 22% consultation-to-contract close rate at $1.1M average to a 58% close rate at $1.7M average in nine months. Same crews. Same subs. Same lumber. A completely rebuilt pre-contract experience.
The architectural photo above does more for premium positioning than 30 phone snapshots ever could.
How we reposition a Marietta custom home builder.
Audit the gap
We compare your current pre-contract experience against the three $1.7M builders winning West Cobb — website, portfolio, consultation process, proposal format, follow-up cadence. By the end of week 2 you know exactly which signals are flagging you as a $1.1M shop.
Rebuild the assets
Full website rebuild, architectural photography of two completed projects, a bound proposal template, a 14-month calendar deliverable, and a 3D rendering workflow that fits inside your existing sales process. The hard part most builders skip.
Test against $1.7M buyers
We watch close rates on the first 6 consultations after the rebuild, refine messaging where prospects hesitate, and lock in the pricing structure. Most builders see their average contract value jump 38–54% within 4 months of the relaunch.
The Lost Mountain builder who finally crossed $1.7M.
A 17-year custom builder in Lost Mountain was averaging $1.13M per contract on roughly 7 builds per year. His work was objectively excellent — trim packages and millwork that easily justified $1.7M pricing. But his consultation experience was a tape measure, a yellow pad, and a single-sheet quote. We rebuilt the website around editorial photography of his three best projects, added a 3D rendering workflow at the second meeting, and packaged proposals as 32-page bound books. Nine months later his average contract was $1.71M, his close rate had climbed from 24% to 61%, and he was turning down two builds per year for the first time in his career.
Average contract value, month over month.
Premium positioning compounds. Every closed $1.7M build becomes case-study fuel for the next one. The curve only steepens.
Behind the scenes — every premium build deserves a proper architectural shoot, not phone photos at handover.
Six questions a Marietta custom builder should ask before another consultation.
If you can’t answer all six clearly — honestly — you’re flagging yourself as a $1.1M builder before the prospect has met you. Worth running through tonight.
“Does my website look like a $1.7M product?”
Full-bleed architectural photography, editorial typography, no stock images. If it looks like a Squarespace template, you’re done before round two.
“What does the prospect leave the first meeting with?”
A tape-measure quote? Or a curated package — samples, photos, a printed schedule? The leave-behind is half the close.
“Are my proposals bound or stapled?”
$1.7M buyers expect a physical artifact that signals investment. A bound, designed proposal lands differently than a 3-page PDF.
“Can I show a 3D rendering before the contract is signed?”
If renderings only come after the contract, you’re losing the buyer who needs to see the home to commit to the price.
“Do I have architectural photography of my last three builds?”
Not handover phone photos — commissioned architectural shoots. One real shoot is worth more than 80 site iPhone pictures.
“What’s my reference handoff actually look like?”
A list of phone numbers? Or a curated client tour at a completed estate? The premium answer is the second one, every time.
A completed great-room shot like this is the kind of asset that lets you raise prices the day it goes on your homepage.
What Marietta custom home builders keep asking us.
Most builders see new positioning fully live in 90 days — website rebuild, photography, proposal template, 3D workflow. The contract-value lift starts showing up in months 4–6 as the new sales process produces its first wave of $1.7M closes. By month 12, average contract value is typically 40–55% higher than baseline.
Volume drops. The right buyers don’t. Most Marietta builders we reposition see total inquiry volume drop 30–40% — and revenue grow 60–80% — because every consultation is with a qualified $1.5M+ buyer instead of a $700K shopper. Fewer meetings, more closes, bigger numbers.
You can move the needle without one, but not as far. The site is the first sorting filter $1.7M buyers use. A bound proposal can win a deal in the room, but if the website didn’t get them into the room, you never get the chance. Honest answer: do the rebuild.
No. One custom home builder per geo, full stop. We won’t run premium positioning for two builders competing for the same West Cobb buyers. That conflict-of-interest line is non-negotiable — it’s how we promise dominant positioning to the builders we do work with.
Engagements run $4,800–$9,200 per month depending on rebuild scope and photography included. For a builder doing 6–8 builds per year, a single repositioned contract typically covers the full first year of the engagement. After that the math compounds quickly.
Imagine closing $1.7M West Cobb builds without changing a single crew.
If you want a 30-minute call where we look at your current website, your last proposal, and the two builders winning $1.7M jobs against you in West Cobb — and tell you exactly what they’re doing differently — that’s free. We do a few of these a week with custom home builders across North Atlanta, and the strategy reads we provide for premium contractors in the broader North Atlanta corridor are often the most useful 30 minutes a builder spends all quarter.
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